Profile: Cabrera garnered some attention after leading the minors with 217 strikeouts (ahead of even Matt Moore) in 2011, but he’s not quite the prospect that one would think based on that factoid. Cabrera is already 25, so the six-foot lefty doesn’t have much more in the way of projection, and his best pitch is a plus changeup, which helps explain how he dominated lower-level hitters to win the whiff title. He was given a cameo in Colorado in 2012 -- primarily because the Rockies didn’t have anyone else to turn to -- and he bombed out, giving up nine hits, seven walks and three homers in just 5.2 innings over two starts. And while his numbers across Double- and Triple-A last season look great (3.05 ERA, 0.97 WHIP, 8.4 K/9), it’s no fluke that Cabrera also surrendered a whopping 21 homers in fewer than 130 innings -- and we all know how homer-prone pitchers do at Coors. Steer clear, even in NL-only play, until Cabrera proves he won’t go nuclear on your ERA and WHIP. (Jason Catania)

The Quick Opinion: Don't get too excited about Cabrera's minor league numbers. The mitigating factors take most of the shine off this prospect.